You scared sir or madame away you MU beauty.
I wasn't scared away, I was banned so I couldn't reply.
You scared sir or madame away you MU beauty.
I wasn't scared away, I was banned so I couldn't reply.
It is for a naval vessel, plus its only the hull that's 20 years old the internal infrastructure and systems have probably been refitted more than once in that time.20 years old ain't old.
20 years may be a long time in the real world, but this is Star Trek, where Excelsiors, Mirandas, Oberths, BoPs and K'tingas were in use for 100+ years.It is for a naval vessel, plus its only the hull that's 20 years old the internal infrastructure and systems have probably been refitted more than once in that time.
Most vessels are retired once the end of the expected service life is reached, which is normally at around 20 years, although some designs may continue on for anything up to 10 years longer if upgrades are available to keep the vessel up to date and the running costs don't become too high.
I suspect the Shenzou is one such example of this.
In design terms 20 years is a very long time indeed.
20 years may be a long time in the real world, but this is Star Trek, where Excelsiors, Mirandas, Oberths, BoPs and K'tingas were in use for 100+ years.
Yes they continued to be used because they were good designs that aged well and were easy to upgrade and maintain, that isn't the case for most classes of ship whether they are ocean going or space faring, I doubt we will ever see any more Galaxy class for instance even if there was a new Star Trek set in the required time period, for various reasons.20 years may be a long time in the real world, but this is Star Trek, where Excelsiors, Mirandas, Oberths, BoPs and K'tingas were in use for 100+ years.
At least in the case of the Excelsior I think it helped give the impression that this was truly the future of the established Star Trek universe that people knew. The others, being older ships, are a little more out of place, but that doesn't change the fact that it happened. Presumably most of them were recently built/upgraded.Which was more real life budget, even if it made no damned sense. Those off the shelf models were cheap.
Yes they continued to be used because they were good designs that aged well and were easy to upgrade and maintain, that isn't the case for most classes of ship whether they are ocean going or space faring, I doubt we will ever see any more Galaxy class for instance even if there was a new Star Trek set in the required time period, for various reasons.
The main issue with ocean going vessels is the damage done by salt water, that isn't something that a starship has to worry about but there are plenty of other hazards in space that can break down a ships hull over time.
It just gets to the point that its easier, cheaper and more efficient to just mothball the ships and replace with new updated ships that are designed for the current time period and the issues that are faced.
Yeah, plus most of them were destroyed quite early into their service, that alone would beg the question as to why, add to that the lesson Starfleet learned about not having families on board ships.Too many windows to clean on the galaxy class as well as kindergartens too near the torpedo room
Star fleet deemed it impractical
At least in the case of the Excelsior I think it helped give the impression that this was truly the future of the established Star Trek universe that people knew. The others, being older ships, are a little more out of place, but that doesn't change the fact that it happened. Presumably most of them were recently built/upgraded.
It just depends on whether the frame meets the need.
The B-52 still flies because it's very good at the specific thing it was designed for. Eventually due to metal fatigue it will have to be replaced. Some ISS modules go all the way back to the Almaz program in the 1980's, and the first module was lofted to orbit back in 1998. Still doing well.
There was nothing wrong with the USS Missouri when it was retired but the role itself was phased out. The ship just was not needed anymore, vs being replaced with ships designed for the need at hand. The the frame meets the need for new engines, avionics, etc, the ship might well be worth saving. I guess the Miranda is the B-52 of Starfleet.
A Miranda-class ship would make a bitchin' party barge.
It would be useful in many roles really. I mean I could see them selling decommissioned ones to other agencies. Hell we saw one used with a skeleton crew of 36 or so as a cargo ship.
Star Trek Online, the current Kobayashi Maru is a modified Miranda, or Miranda-like ship.
I assume it's civilian. The registry prefix is ECS.
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